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The Kestra Director Who Built and Sold a Device Company Keeps Buying Stock
On March 26, 2026, Director Raymond W. Cohen reported the open-market purchase of 10,000 shares of Kestra Medical Technologies, as disclosed in a SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average purchase price ($19.98); post-transaction value based on March 26, 2026 market close ($19.68).
Key questions
Cohen’s direct stake increased by 24.45%, rising from 40,903 to 50,903 common shares, representing approximately 0.087% of the 58.37 million shares outstanding as of April 2, 2026.
No; the purchase was executed entirely in Cohen’s direct capacity, with no indirect entities or derivatives involved in the reported activity.
Cohen has made two open-market purchases since joining the board in March 2025, totaling 27,000 shares, with the remainder of his current 50,903 share position built through board compensation awards.
Shares were priced at $19.68 at market close on March 26, 2026, down 17.2% over the trailing twelve months, and Cohen’s purchase was executed near these levels.
Company overview
Note: 1-year performance is calculated using March April 2, 2026 as the reference date.
Company snapshot
Kestra Medical Technologies operates at scale within the medical device sector, focusing on advanced wearable solutions for cardiovascular risk management. The company’s strategy centers on integrating intuitive hardware with digital health services to enhance patient and provider engagement. Its competitive edge lies in delivering unified, connected care platforms designed to improve clinical outcomes for high-risk cardiac patients.
What this transaction means for investors
Cohen has spent decades in the medical device space, most notably as CEO of Axonics, a device company he built from early commercial stage to a $3.7 billion acquisition by Boston Scientific in 2024 — he knows how to navigate physician adoption, reimbursement, and the clinical sales cycle that defines success in this category. That’s almost exactly the playbook Kestra needs to execute. This is his second open-market purchase since joining the board in early 2025, both at depressed price levels, neither under a pre-scheduled trading plan. For investors, the company signals worth watching are contract wins, reimbursement coverage expansions, and whether Kestra can grow its patient base beyond the initial post-hospitalization window. Cohen is a director worth following during his tenure. How he responds to future price moves — and whether he keeps buying — will tell you more than any single filing. That said, this is one director’s activity — useful context, but not a substitute for evaluating Kestra’s fundamentals on their own merits before making any investment decision.